1 Color Theory. 2 What is Color Theory? Premeditated use of color.
COLOR THEORY - TIU
Transcript of COLOR THEORY - TIU
COLOR THEORY
Assit.lec./ Fatn Radhwan Yaseen
Department of interior design
Second Semester 2020-2021Second Stage
Color in interior design- Third lecture
• The Main theories to set up a color wheel
• Traditional Color wheel
• Color wheel (primary colors ) (RYB)
• Color wheel (secondary colors )
• Colorwheel (tertiary colors )
• Color wheel Applications inArchitecture
• Color terminology(vocabulary)
OUTLINE
THEMAIN THEORIESTO SETUPACOLORWHEEL:
• Many attempts have been made to establish methodologiesto evaluate the advantages of certain color combinations,and the main color theories in design , are as the following :
1.Newton's Hue Circle.2.Itten's Color Wheel.3.Munsell's Color Order .4.Ostwald Color theory .5.The Pantone Color System.
Ø newton circle:
In his attempt to develop theory of color:• Newton was the first to understand that colors did not lay on
linear chart ,but rather existed in a continuum.• Isaac Newton split white light in to seven colors ( red , orange
,yellow ,green ,blue ,indigo ,violet) and he arranged them on a disk in proportionate slices such that the spinning of the disk would result in the color white.
CONT.
In his attempt to develop at theory ofcolor:
• Newton hue circle is represented bywhite at the center . and the huesarranged in order around the disk.
• Each hue is given a weight ,orproportion ,that balances it within thesystem.
• Newton closed his system through amix between red and violet that did notappear in his natural primaryspectrum.
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Ø OSTWALD COLORTHEORY(1916):• The Color Harmony Manuals were
published in1916,• The Ostwald system creates a color spacebased on dominant wavelength, purity,and luminance, mapping the values ofhue, saturation and brightness.• The full colors are arranged around a complete circle starts out with four basic colors: yellow to the north; red to the east; blue to the south; and green to the west.• With these eight colors, Ostwald constructs 24 color-
hues with equal spacing and numbers them.
CONT.
• Thus the point in the Ostwald color space is represented by values C , W, and B to represent the percentages of the system.
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Ø TheMunsellColorOrderSystem(1921):• This theory is used to represent color terminology .• The American Albert Munsell developed a system (three
dimensional ) model of color analysis based on the methodology that for each color hue , value , and Chroma.
• In Munsell's system:1. Hue is arranged around the perimeterof a sphere,2. Value as it moves from the top pole(light) to the bottom (dark) .3.Chroma as it moves toward thecenter.
CONT.
• Munsell established numerical scales with visually uniform steps (notation) for each of these attributes , that made it easy to identify any color in his system.
• In this notation, each color has a logical relationship to all other colors. This leads to endless creative possibilities in color choices, as well as the ability to precisely communicate these choices.
Example :Using the Munsell numerical scale HV/C, for the color (Red ) would have the Munsell notation (5R 6/12) =1. (5 )is the hue (red).2. ( 6 ) is the value .3. (12 )Chroma .
• Munsell Color Order System is called , the Color tree.
CONT.
• The notation for a neutral color is written: NV.
• The Chroma of a neutral color is zero, but it is customary to omit the zero in the notation.
• The notation N 1/ denotes a black, (a very dark neutral), while N 10/ denotes a white,( a very light neutral). This notation for a middle gray is N 5/.
Ø Itten'sColorWheel (1961)
• Johannes Itten developed his color wheelbased on primary colors of (red , yellow,and blue) , The three primary colorsplaced in an equal triangle ;yellow at thetop ,red is the lower right, and the blue inthe lower left.
CONT.
Around this triangle Itten inscribed a hexagon,resulted from mixing the primaries to obtain thethree, Secondary colors as the following:Yellow +red = orange, yellow + blue = green , and red + blue =violet .
• The six colors(primaries and secondaries) mixed carefully 12 sequenced colors.
CONT.
• Itten didn’t believe in further expanding the color wheel to 24 – or 100 hue wheels.
• He believes that the dilution (decrease) of the naming system in his establishment make it easier to identify every colordistinctions.
• This theory is used to represent color traditional wheel for artists and designers .
Note :This 12color wheel is represent the base for all schemes
CONT.
Ø The PantoneColor System(1962):• Pantone is a ompany that
began as a commercial printing company in the1950s.
• This system is used in a varietyof industries, like : printing, it issometimes used in manufactureof colored paint, fabric, andplastics.
CONT.
• Pantone’s system consists of approximately 1,114 inkcolors that are produced from 13 base pigments (15including white and black) mixed in specific amounts.
• However, it is best known for its color matching system (PMS),as shown in the Figure.
• The idea behind the (PMS) is to allowdesigners to "color match" specificcolors when a design enters productionstage, regardless of the equipment usedto produce the color.
• Each color is identified by a three – or four digit number followed by a C, M, or U, such as PMS ( 2448 U).
• The letters following the number refer to the type of paper they are printed on,such as C=coated, M=matte ,and U=uncoated.
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• Since 2000, the Pantone Color Institute declares a particular color"Color of the Year".
• Pantone recommends that PMS Color Guides be purchased annually, as their inks become yellowish over time.
• The Pantone system can be used with the CMY mixing process as well as the screen based RGB process.
CONT.
TRADITIONAL COLOR WHEEL• The color wheel is a visual
representation of color theory .• One of the basic tools for
combining colors, its represent anorganization of color hues around acircle, which shows therelationships between primarycolors, secondary colors, tertiarycolors .
Ø Color wheel consists of :• Primary colors• Secondary colors• Tertiary colors
The most common color wheelis the twelve (12) hue wheel(artistic)model. A colorwheelcould have as few as six huesor as many as 24.48 96 ormore.
COLORWHEEL(PRIMARYCOLORS )(RYB)
• Group of colors (yellow, red, blue)which represent the hues that form colorwheel base.
• These basic colors can be mixed toproduce all other colors.
• The primary colors cannot be made bycombining othercolors.
• Mixing primary colors : Red, yellow, blue(RYB) .
• Colors that are made by mixing twoadjacent primary colors ( a 50 percentthe mixing any two primarycolors.)
COLORWHEEL(SECONDARYCOLORS )
primary
Primary
Cyanine(Blue)+ Magenta(Red) =Magenta(Red)+Yellow =Yellow + Cyanine(Blue) =
Secondary
Violet Orange Green
COLORWHEEL (TERTIARY COLORS )
• Intermediate ,orTertiary , colors arecreated by mixing a primary and asecondary colors .
• for example , the tertiary color produced when mixing the primary color( blue) with the secondary color( green) , is called 'blue- green'.
Red-Orange Yellow-Orange Yellow-Green Blue-Green Blue-Violet Red-Violet
Color wheel ApplicationsinArchitecture
1.“DE STIJL” art movement :• The primary colors, (red, yellow and blue) use
in design can have widely varying effects.• They can evoke nostalgia for the 1960’s or give
something a pop art feel.• Used in small doses it can be powerful visual tool.• One of the most famous application for Primary
colors in Architecture is in “DE STIJL” art movement , “DE STIJL”, In Dutch, means “The Style”, also known as neoplasticism.
• It is a school of art founded in Holland in by the painter Pieter Mondrian , Bart van der Lech and Theo van Doesburg andthe architect Gerrit Rietveld ( 1917 to 1931).
Red and Blue ChaIrDesigned by GerritRietveld 1917
Arithmetische CompositieTheo van Doesburg
1924
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• This movement was based on simplicity, and pure abstraction throughthe use of straight horizontal and vertical lines and rectangular shapesand forms.• The works avoided symmetry and attained asymmetrical balance by use
of primary colors (red, blue , yellow), values of black, grey, andwhite, strong black geometric lines on a white background.• The harmony and order was established through a reduction
of elements to pure geometric forms and primary colors.
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MODERN INTERPRETATIONS from“DE STIJL” art movementInArchitecture (Elevations )
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MODERN INTERPRETATIONS from “DE STIJL” art movement.In interior , furniture and fashion
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2. Wassily kadinsky theory.
• Wassily Kandinsky (1866 –1944) was a Russian painter and art theorist.Kandinsky is generally credited as thepioneer of abstract art, Born in Moscow,studied first the Academy of fine Arts,After that, he taught at the Bauhausschool of art and architecture, and that’sinfluenced on his thinking .
• Wassily Kandinsky’s art explored therelationship between color and itsviewers. embracing color as theprimary vehicle for expression. , so hecompletely separated painting from aneed to drawing a subject.
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• The theories he developed about colorand meaning would prove influential inall creative fields, with the De Stijlmovement expanding his philosophiesand incorporating color into industrialdesign and Architecture.
• The goal of Kandinsky’s art was tocapture music in a plastic medium, toevoke the same feelings a piece ofmusic could evoke through shades andhues.
• Employing the color wheel, Kandinskywent through each hue, explaining thefeelings it evoked, emotions it captured,and the sound it “made.”
Color Study: Squares with Concentric Circles by Wassily Kandinsky.
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• He was influenced byCubism movement , buthe avoid the grays, brownsand blacks colors of thismovement .
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• Cycling through the colors of the rainbow, here is a sample of Kandinsky’s thoughts on color from his book “Concerning the Spiritual in Art,” paired with buildings and music .
1.Red color significiance.
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alive, restless, confidently striving towards a goal, glowing, “manly maturity.” Translated into sound: “sound of a trumpet, strong and harsh,” like a Fanfare, Tuba, deep notes on the cello, clear violin.
YOUNG MODULES , Zaragoza, Spain
Refurbishment and Extension of ArcelorMittal R&D Headquarters , Spain
2. Orange color significance: a mixture of red and yellow, radiant, healthy, serious. Translated into sound: middle range church bell, an altovoice.
3.Yellow color significance: “warm, cheeky, and exciting, disturbing for people, typical earthly color… representing madness in color, an attack of rage, blind madness, maniacal rage.” Translated into sound: loud sharp trumpets and highfanfares.
Falcon Headquarters San Angel, Mexico
4. Green color significance:stillness and peace, but with a hidden,passive strength. “Green is like a fat, veryhealthy cow lying still and unmoving, onlycapable of chewing the cud, regarding theworld with stupid dull eyes.” Translated intosound: quiet drawn out middle positionviolin.
housing social green Madrid,in Madrid
Didden Village , Netherlands
Unfortunately, Kandinsky didn’t distinguish between blue and indigo. Apparently they were the same to him.
5. Blue color significance: deep, inner, supernatural, peaceful. “Sinking towards black, it has the overtone of a mourning … typical heavenly color.” Translated into sound: the flute, cello, and organ.
Avant Chelsea by 1100 Architect, New York City
PURPLE HILL HOUSE , KOREA.
• After studying the impact of each color and analyzingthis effect on the human we see the importance ofselecting colors when designing each Architecturalfacility because the colors raised in the human selfdifferent feelings and emotions and thus ensure theachievement of the desired goal for each facility ofpsychological comfort and different feelingsdepending on its function .
6. Violet color significance: a mixture of red and blue, “morbid, extinguished and sad.” Translated into sound: the English horn and bassoon.
The Main Qualities of Color :1. Hue2. Value (Tint ,shade)3. Saturation (Tone)
In this color wheel , we have 4 splitted circles , the 12 colors .Each circle represent a certain term (hue, tint , tone and shade ) .
COLOR TERMINOLOGY(VOCABULARY )
Color Terminologycircle
1. Hue:• Another name for color .• A hue is the purest form of a color.• Hues are colors that have not been mixed with
white, gray, or black.• White, Black and Grey are never referred to
them as a Hue.
Hue(purecolor)
CONT.
2. VALUE (Tint , SHADE) :• In nature there are hundreds of different steps in value that are
sometimes not easily distinguished by the human eye.• Value is Refers to the lightness or darkness of a color.• It indicates the quantity of light reflected.• 8 graduations of value scale between white and black.• By applying a single color (in this case red), we can get an entire range
of values of the single color...
CONT.
Ø TINT :
• Tint in the circle of colors next to thehues .• Result of adding more white to an
existing color.• The hue may be mixed with just a touch
of white or with so much white that thehue is very faint .
Tint
Hue
Shade
(Value)
CONT.
Ø Shade :
• A shade is the hue mixed with black .• Just as with the tint , the hue may be
mixed (Value) with just a touch of Black ormore .
Tint
Hue
Shade
CONT.
3. Saturation (Tone)• Intensity is the brightness or dullness of a color. It is sometimes
called “chroma”.• The intensity changes by using the complementary color.The
degree of brightness is referred to as“saturation”.• It showed When a pigment hue is “toned,” both white and black
(gray) are added to the color to reduce the color’s saturation.
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Difference between saturation and chrome:
•Saturation is the “colourfulness of an area judged in proportion to its brightness”.
•Chroma is the “colourfulness of an area judged as a proportion of the brightness of a similarly illuminated area that appears white or highly transmitting”
Tint
Hue
(Value)
Shade
Ø Tone :• A tone is the hue mixed with
any amount of gray .
(Saturation) tone
CONT.
A SIMPLE DIAGRAM SHOWS THAT :
• Tints, tones, and shades can be produced by adding white, gray, or black to a pure hue.
• Remember… colors appear darker when placed on rough textures. Paint appearsdarker when it dries onthe wall.
• Artificial incandescent and fluorescent lighting changes the appearance of some colors.
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• Here the Hue is (violet ).There are 60+ colors here, but allof them are Violet - hued colors.
• Chroma changes from left-to-right Low - chroma colors are on the left... Mid -chroma colors near the center... High -chroma colors on the right.
• Value changes from bottom-to-top: Low values (shades) nearthe bottom High values (tints)near the top.
EXAMPLEABOUTVALUEAND SATURATION
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EXAMPLEABOUTVALUEAND
SATURATION
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